PRINCE has great music, super stunts, Vivek Oberoi's bravura performance and terrific promotion as its trump card, but where it falters is in its writing [in its second half mainly]. Yet, all said and done, the film has the merits to strike a chord with the youth and lovers of masala movies.
One of the advantages of having a GenNext director is, he's ready to take risks, ready to tread the untrodden path, ready to go where no one has been before. But there's a disadvantage too: Visuals and technique take precedence, while story takes a backseat. PRINCE has a terrific first half, where technique and content go hand in hand, but technique overpowers the content in its post-interval portions.
What surprises you is that PRINCE is penned by the writer of RACE [Shiraz Ahmed] and like RACE, PRINCE too has several twists and turns every 15 odd minutes. But the twists and turns are a mixed bag here - captivating at times, not captivating at some places. More on that later!
On the brighter side, PRINCE has great stunts and  chase sequences [Allan Amin], fantastic visuals [South Africa] and of  course, a chartbuster musical score [Sachin Gupta]. And these three  factors, coupled with Vivek Oberoi's convincing performance, should take  the film to safety! 
One of the savviest thieves in the world [Vivek Oberoi] commits the biggest heist of his life. He wakes up next the morning to realize he has a gunshot wound on his arm that he doesn't remember getting. In his quest to find answers, he discovers his name is Prince, he used to work for a man named Sarang and his girlfriend's name is Maya.
  He is being hunted by the secret service of India, the CBI and the  biggest white collared criminals in the world. He is the most wanted man  in the country because only he knows the whereabouts of the heist,  which contains a secret that is linked not only to his loss of memory,  but threatens the future of the human race. 
Every day he meets a new girl claiming to be Maya. He doesn't remember where he has hidden the Heist. He has just dive days of his life. Time is running out...
Although PRINCE stands on a novel premise, flashes of the Dev Anand starrer JEWEL THIEF do cross your mind. PRINCE starts off with a heist and soon after, Vivek realises that his memory has been 'erased'. The mystery only deepens when he meets three different women, all posing as Maya and all having a new story to tell. So far, so good!
One of the savviest thieves in the world [Vivek Oberoi] commits the biggest heist of his life. He wakes up next the morning to realize he has a gunshot wound on his arm that he doesn't remember getting. In his quest to find answers, he discovers his name is Prince, he used to work for a man named Sarang and his girlfriend's name is Maya.
Every day he meets a new girl claiming to be Maya. He doesn't remember where he has hidden the Heist. He has just dive days of his life. Time is running out...
Although PRINCE stands on a novel premise, flashes of the Dev Anand starrer JEWEL THIEF do cross your mind. PRINCE starts off with a heist and soon after, Vivek realises that his memory has been 'erased'. The mystery only deepens when he meets three different women, all posing as Maya and all having a new story to tell. So far, so good!
  But the difficult part is to keep the viewer's interest alive till the  finale and that's where PRINCE starts crumbling. The second hour - the  entire journey of Prince and the real Maya going on a wild chase to  trace the coin and also regain Prince's memory - is exciting in bits and  spurts. 
  The concept of erasing a person's memory and then inserting it back with  chips and gizmos sounds wow, but the way it has been projected in the  film is ludicrous and far from convincing. Ditto for the climax, when  Prince traces the villain to the Afghan-Pakistan border. He does so  after he had hidden a device in the villain's shoes, while he was being  bashed in the earlier sequence. Also, showing Prince having the same  qualities as Spiderman [he can cast a web anytime he's in distress]  makes you wonder, is he an ordinary mortal or a super human? 
  Vivek is super in a rather difficult role. He is excellent in dramatic  portions especially and carries off the stunts with remarkable ease.  Nandana is effective. Neeru doesn't get much scope. Aruna is the best of  the lot. Sanjay Kapoor enacts his part well. Dalip Tahil is alright.  Isaiah has screen presence and looks ferocious on screen. Rajesh Khattar  is hardly there. 
  On the whole, PRINCE has great music, super stunts, Vivek Oberoi's  bravura performance and terrific promotion as its trump card, but where  it falters is in its writing [in its second half mianly]. Yet, all said  and done, the film has the merits to strike a chord with the youth and  lovers of masala movies.
If You Liked The Posts Say It In comments !!!